In this type of installation, there are multiple physical installations of the Agent Manager on different failover nodes. When one node fails and shuts down, the next one starts and its Agent Manager instance accesses the latest changes stored in its state directory on a shared drive.
Begin by installing the Agent Manager on each node in your cluster. See Installing the Agent Manager for installation instructions.
In the following example, <state_dir> is a path to a state directory on a shared network server that is accessible locally from all machines. For example: on Windows clients, the <state_dir> can be f:\cluster_shared_dir\fglam_states\STATENAME_A, while on UNIX® clients, it is /mnt/cluster_shared_dir/fglam_states/STATENAME_A.
fglam --create-state --location <state_dir>
fglam --location <state_dir>
The files related to the Agent Manager instance’s run-time state—for example, configuration and log files—are stored under its remote state directory on the shared drive.
When the Agent Manager is running, you can deploy agents to it and create agent instances. Files related to the run-time state for these agents (including log files) are stored under the remote state directory for this Agent Manager instance. Using the example above, they are stored in <state_dir>.
Ensure that only one instance of the Agent Manager that uses a particular state directory is running at a time. Do not run two instances of the Agent Manager on separate machines (or separate active nodes in the cluster) and cause these instances to use the same shared state directory simultaneously.
The polling rate is controlled by the following properties:
• |
Minimum Polling Interval (seconds): The minimum polling interval, in seconds. |
• |
Maximum Polling Interval (seconds): The maximum polling interval, in seconds. |
• |
Polling Timeout (seconds): A time-out/grace period (in seconds) that the FglAMAdapter waits for a host to respond, before considering it as disconnected. This is used to account for clock skews and changes in timing typically seen on heavily loaded VMware images. |
For more information about the Agent Properties dashboard, see the Administration and Configuration Help.
Start by navigating to the Agent Properties dashboard, the FglAM namespace, and the FglAMAdapter properties. From there, you can edit the High Availability Host Config list-based property to assign an Agent Manager to HA Partitions and define their eligibility for becoming HA Primary hosts.
3 |
On the navigation panel, under Dashboards, navigate to Administration > Agents > Agent Properties. |
4 |
On the Agent Properties dashboard that appears in the display area, in the Namespace/Type view, expand the FglAM node, and click the FglAMAdapter node. |
5 |
Assign the Agent Manager to a desired HA Partition by editing its entry in the High Availability Host Config list. This list contains all Agent Managers that are currently connected to the Adapter, and is accessible through the High Availability Host Config property. The list also identifies the names of their respective HA Partitions, and the priorities for considering Agent Managers as potential HA Primary hosts. |
a |
Get started with editing the High Availability Host Config list-based property. |
d |
Click Save Changes. |
TIP: To get an overview of the HA Configuration in real time (for example, to see the current HA Primary hosts, and the HA State of each HA Peer), you can view the HAManagerMBean.
Using the JMX-Console, click FglAM:name=HAManager and invoke the diagnosticSnapshotAsString() method. The resulting output lists each of the known Agent Managers, which (if any) HA Partition they are assigned to, what deployment set they have, who is the HA Primary and what HA State they are in. |
© 2024 Quest Software Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Conditions d’utilisation Confidentialité Cookie Preference Center